The ‘princely proprietor’ of Jenkinstown and the head of one of Ireland’s oldest Catholic families, Bryan’s return for his native county of Kilkenny had been eagerly anticipated. As ‘the first Catholic in Ireland’, it was hoped that he might ‘hurl the fire of his wrath’ against ‘the calumniators’ of the papacy in the House of Commons, and thus ‘inaugurate a new era in that hostile senate’.
Bryan was born at Ballyduff House, county Kilkenny, and owed his second name to his godfather, the future king of the Belgians.
Bryan was one of only two of his parents’ nine children to come of age, and he succeeded to his father’s estate at Jenkinstown while still a minor in October 1848. In 1876 he owned 8,209 acres in Kilkenny, thus making him the ninth largest proprietor in the county, along with more than 4,500 acres in counties Meath and Kildare.
Already prominent among Ireland’s Catholic gentry, the Bryans had grown wealthy ‘owing to prudent marriages’. In December 1849 Bryan married a daughter of the Protestant marquess of Conyngham at the chief secretary’s lodge in Dublin, the wedding being attended by the viceroy, Lord Clarendon.
By this time, however, Bryan was experiencing marital problems. He was known to have ‘a naturally hasty and ungovernable temperament’,
Bryan remained involved in politics but distanced himself from the ‘Young Ireland’ faction within the independent Irish representation. In January 1854 he refused to officiate at a dinner given for the Members for County Kilkenny on the ground that invitations had been extended to George Gavan Duffy and Frederick Lucas, the chief parliamentary proponents of the Tenant League.
Meanwhile Bryan made his name as a sportsman. A ‘first-rate shot’, he kept a famous pack of staghounds at Jenkinstown, and became master of the Kilkenny hunt. He was also a steward of the Kilkenny races, and it was at the racecourse where his ‘elegant figure’ and ‘marvellously folded white cravat’ earned him the nickname of ‘The Squire’.
In the 1860s Bryan returned to politics by coming out in ‘defence of the rights of the Papacy’, speaking on the issue at a public meeting in Kilkenny. With the support of the local Catholic clergy Bryan came forward for his native county at the 1865 general election as the ‘popular candidate’, being in sympathy with the programme of the National Association.
In November 1865 Bryan, who approved of attempts to create a ‘united and independent’ party of Irish Liberals, was one of 22 MPs to attend a conference in Dublin, held at the request of the National Association, to adopt a programme for the forthcoming parliamentary session and among those tasked with framing an Irish land bill.
Bryan was not a regular attender but made several contributions to debate. He began in May 1866 by asking the Irish attorney-general to confirm that in the previous year the lord chief justice of Ireland, Anthony Lefroy, had been unable to read out a sentence of death passed on a prisoner at Tullamore without assistance. He subsequently raised the matter with the chief secretary for Ireland in order to draw the House’s attention to the ‘waning intellect and bodily infirmity’ of certain members of the Irish bench.
In January 1867 Bryan addressed a county meeting in Kilkenny, in which he stated his determination to address Ireland’s ‘three principal wants … the land, the Church, and education’. He took the National Association’s line on Fenianism, dismissing it as a ‘socialist movement’ which was largely confined to ‘the younger portion of the community’, which might easily be remedied by ‘a good land bill’.
In the lobbies on the Conservative reform bill, he supported amendments to reduce the residency qualification to one year, 2 May, enfranchise lodgers, 13 May, and reduce the representation of small boroughs, 31 May, 17 June 1867. He voted for Henry Fawcett’s bill to amend the Uniformity Act, 29 May, and divided against the Lords’ amendments to the reform bill, 8 Aug. 1867. Convinced that the established church in Ireland was ‘a monstrous anomaly’, Bryan had voted for Sir John Gray’s motion to reconsider its status, 7 May 1867, and backed William Gladstone’s subsequent motions on the question in April and May 1868.
Possessed of ‘genial manners and a kindly disposition’, Bryan remained popular with his constituents and was re-elected at Kilkenny in 1868 as an ‘advanced Liberal’.
